| Literature DB >> 26973838 |
Brice Guerpillon1, Andre Boibieux1, Clemence Guenne2, Christine Ploton3, Tristan Ferry1, Max Maurin4, Emmanuel Forestier5, Olivier Dauwalder3, Patrick Manipoud6, Aicha Ltaïef-Boudrigua7, Robert Gürkov8, Francois Vandenesch3, Coralie Bouchiat3.
Abstract
We report here three unusual cases of otomastoiditis due to Francisella tularensis, complicated by cervical abscesses and persistent hearing loss, plus facial paralysis for one patient. Intriguingly, the three patients had practiced canyoneering independently in the same French river, between 2009 and 2014, several days before clinical symptoms onset. The results point out that fresh water exposure may be a potential contamination route for tularemia. Besides, due to the frequent complications and sequelae, we believe that F. tularensis should be considered as a possible etiology in case of otitis media, failure of the conventional antibiotic treatment, and suspicious exposure of the bacteria.Entities:
Keywords: France; Francisella tularensis; canyoneering; otitis media; otomastoiditis
Year: 2016 PMID: 26973838 PMCID: PMC4776157 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2016.00009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Characteristics of patients in a series of .
| Patient 1 ( | Patient 2 | Patient 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Date | July 2008 | July 2009 | May 2014 |
| Gender | Female | Female | Male |
| Age (years old) | 27 | 39 | 43 |
| Incubation (days) | <7 | 10 | 3–7 |
| Clinical presentation | Pharyngitis | Pharyngitis | Tonsillitis (right-side) |
| Purulent left otitis media | Purulent right otitis media | Purulent right otitis media | |
| Retropharyngeal swelling | Submandibular adenopathy | Subdigastric adenopathy | |
| Complications | Cervical phlegmonous inflammation | Conductive deafness (40 dB) | Facial peripheral paralysis |
| CRP upon hospital admission | 36 mg/L | 90 mg/L | 155 mg/L |
| Empirical treatment active for | None | Ofloxacin (8 days) | Amikacin (5 days) |
| Elapsed time between clinical signs onset and diagnosis (days) | 44 | 25 | 28 |
| Microbiological diagnostic techniques | 16S PCR Serology | Culture | Culture |
| 16S PCR | |||
| Bacterial etiology | |||
| Treatment (from diagnosis) | Day 1–5: doxycyclin | Day 0–4: gentamicin | Day 0–45: ciprofloxacin + doxycycline |
| Day 1–23: ciprofloxacin | Day 0–25: ciprofloxacin | Day 45–78: no treatment | |
| Day 11–23: gentamicin | Day 89: transtympanic tube | Day 78–108: doxycyclin | |
| Paracentesis | |||
| Lesions needle aspiration | |||
| Surgical drainage | |||
| Outcome | Conductive deafness (8-month follow-up) | Conductive deafness (10 dB) minor vestibular disorders (10-month follow-up) | Asymptomatic (2-month follow-up) |
Figure 1Mastoid CT scan of patient 3. (A) High-resolution axial section focus of the right temporal bone. Acute otitis media with tympanomastoid homogenous opacity inflammatory filling of the whole tympanic cavity () and mastoid cells (*). (B) Swelling related to the right tonsillitis (*).
Figure 2Post treatment imaging. (A) Gadolinium-enhanced axial T1 weighted fat-suppressed MRI. Minimal persistence of gadolinium enhancement in the right mastoid. (B) PET CT fused image. Good aeration and minimal persistence of 18 FDG uptake in the right mastoid. No other associated bone or tissue anomaly.